William Rubinstein


William D. Rubinstein is a historian and author. His best-known work, Men of Property: The Very Wealthy in Britain Since the Industrial Revolution, charts the rise of the 'super rich', a class he sees as expanding exponentially.

Early life

Rubinstein was born in New York City, and educated at Swarthmore College and Johns Hopkins University in the United States.

Career

Rubinstein worked at Lancaster University in England from 1974 to 1975, the Australian National University in Canberra during 1976–1978, Deakin University in Victoria, Australia from 1978 to 1995, and from 1995 to 2011 worked at Aberystwyth University, Wales. At Deakin he had a personal chair in history, and at Aberystwyth he was professor of history. He is currently an adjunct professor at Monash University in Melbourne.
He is an elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia, and of the Royal Historical Society.
He was President of the Jewish Historical Society of England from 2002 to 2004 and was the editor of the articles on Britain and the Commonwealth in the second edition of the reference work The Encyclopaedia Judaica. He was foundation editor of the Journal of the Australian Jewish Historical Society and a founder of the Australian Association for Jewish Studies.

Career as author

Rubinstein is very widely published, essays and articles of his having appeared in various scholarly books and periodicals in Australia and overseas. Books of his have been translated into Finnish, Russian, French, Hebrew, Italian, Chinese, and Japanese. He is particularly known for his research on the wealth-holding classes in modern Britain, making use of probate and other taxation records, in such works as Men of Property: The Very Wealthy in Britain Since the Industrial Revolution and Capitalism, Culture and Decline in Britain, 1750–1990. More recently he has co-authored The Richest of the Rich, an account of the 250 richest-ever people in British history since the Norman Conquest. He authored The All-Time Australian 200 Rich List.
A scholar of modern Jewish history, his books on that area include A History of the Jews in the English-Speaking World: Great Britain and the controversial work, The Myth of Rescue examines such topics as the assassination of President Kennedy, Jack the Ripper, and the Shakespeare authorship question. He also explored the topic of who wrote Shakespeare’s works in a book he co-authored with Brenda James, The Truth Will Out, which hypothesizes that Sir Henry Neville, an Elizabethan Member of Parliament and Ambassador to France, was the real author of Shakespeare’s works.
His wife Dr Hilary L. Rubinstein F.R.Hist.S. is a historian in her own right. She has published widely on Australian Jewish history and also on British Jewish history and is co-editor of the Victoria-produced issues of the Journal of the Australian Jewish Historical Society. She has contributed to The Biographical Dictionary of the Australian Senate and to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, to the Reader's Guide to British History and to the Palgrave Dictionary of Anglo-Jewish History. She has also published on British naval history, her main works in that area being Trafalgar Captain Durham of the Defiance published by Tempus in 2005; The Durham Papers, and Catastrophe at Spithead: The Sinking of the Royal George published by Seaforth in 2020.